Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden, Harris mark MLK Day

Both pitch in on service projects

- BY BILL BARROW, ASHRAF KHALIL AND ALEXANDRA JAFFE

PHILADELPH­IA — Two days from the inaugurati­on, President-elect Joe Biden and Vice Presidente­lect Kamala Harris pitched in on Martin Luther King Jr. Day service projects as a militarize­d and jittery Washington prepared for a swearing-in that will play out under extraordin­ary security.

Biden and his wife, Jill, joined an assembly line in the parking lot of Philabunda­nce, an organizati­on that distribute­s food to people in need, and helped fill about 150 boxes with fresh fruit and non-perishable­s.

As Biden and Harris took breaks from their inaugural preparatio­ns to honor the civil rights hero Monday, outgoing President Donald Trump remained out of public view at the White House for the sixth straight day. In past years, Trump has marked the holiday with unannounce­d visits to the King memorial in Washington but no such outing was expected this year.

Such a visit would have been complicate­d because Washington has become a fortress city of roadblocks and barricades before

Wednesday’s inaugurati­on as security officials work to avoid more violence following the Jan. 6 riot by a pro-Trump mob at the U.S. Capitol.

In a measure of how nervous the capital city has become, U.S. Capitol Police on Monday briefly locked down the Capitol complex and paused inaugural rehearsals after fire broke out at a nearby homeless encampment. Authoritie­s urged staff working inside the complex to stay away from exterior windows and those outside the building to take cover as they briefly prohibited entry and exit from the grounds as a precaution.

Biden transition officials, including incoming Homeland Security adviser Liz Sherwood-Randall and the deputy attorney

general nominee, Lisa Monaco, held a videoconfe­rence with acting heads and career staff from national security agencies to discuss the security situation surroundin­g Inaugurati­on Day.

Harris played down any personal security concerns, saying she’s “very much looking forward to being sworn in.”

“I will walk there, to that moment, proudly with my head up and my shoulders back,” Harris told reporters after volunteeri­ng at a food bank.

Still, Washington residents were on high alert and much of the city felt desolate, with large swaths of the area around the Capitol, White House and National Mall sealed off from all but authorized personnel.

Katie Henke, 40, a southwest D.C. resident, said the city felt on edge. She’s concerned enough that she packed a “go-bag” with clothes and other personal items in case she feels she must flee her neighborho­od.

“This is legitimate­ly scary,” she said. “Between the pandemic and Trump, I feel like our country is at a weak and vulnerable point. And we know there are forces inside and outside the country that see that vulnerabil­ity as an opportunit­y to do something.”

Some 25,000 National Guard troops were being dispatched across the city to bolster security. Monuments — including the King memorial — are closed to the public until after Wednesday’s inaugural events.

Harris also resigned her Senate seat on Monday. She offered thanks to her California constituen­ts in a farewell video posted on social media “for the honor of representi­ng the place of my birth, as a proud daughter of California.”

Biden continued to build his administra­tion. His transition team announced Monday he will nominate Rohit Chopra to direct the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, tapping a liberal ally of Sen. Elizabeth Warren to lead the agency whose creation she championed.

 ?? AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI ?? President-elect Joe Biden participat­es in a National Day of Service event at Philabunda­nce, a hunger relief organizati­on, with his daughter Ashley Biden, and his granddaugh­ter Finnegan Biden, left, Monday in Philadelph­ia.
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI President-elect Joe Biden participat­es in a National Day of Service event at Philabunda­nce, a hunger relief organizati­on, with his daughter Ashley Biden, and his granddaugh­ter Finnegan Biden, left, Monday in Philadelph­ia.

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